Kydd entered cautiously as the flag-lieutenant intoned, 'Commander Kydd, sir,' then left, closing the door soundlessly after him.
Admiral Lockwood looked up from his papers, appraised Kydd for some seconds, then rose from his desk. He was a big man and, in his gold lace, powerfully intimidating. 'Mr Kydd, I had been expecting you before now, sir. You're aware we'll be at war with Mr Bonaparte shortly?'
'Aye, sir,' Kydd replied respectfully. It was not the navy way to offer excuses, whatever their merit.
'Hmm. The Admiralty seems to think well enough of you. Desires me to give you early employment.' The gaze continued, considering, thoughtful.
'Now I
Kydd had no wish to take a passive role ashore with a body of enthusiastic amateurs and fishermen watching and waiting on the coast. He clung stubbornly to his hopes. 'Er, that's very generous in ye, sir, but I had hoped f'r a—f'r a command at sea, sir.'
'At sea!' Lockwood sighed. 'As we all do, Mr Kydd.' He came round the desk and stood before Kydd, legs braced as though on a quarterdeck. 'You've come at it rather late for that. For weeks now I've had all the harum-scarum young bloods to satisfy and you as commander and not a lieutenant . . .'
It had come back to haunt Kydd yet again: as a lieutenant he could be put instantly in any one of the large number of cutters, brigs, armed schooners and the like, but as a commander only a sloop as befitting his rank would do. 'Ah—I have it. Command? How do you feel about taking
A two-decker ship-of-the-line to the Caribbean? Kydd was dumbstruck. Was the admiral jesting? Where was the joke? Then he realised: the only way he could captain a seventy-four was if she was going to sail
'Yes, yes, I know you would, but almost everything that swims is in commission now. Don't suppose
Kydd realised he had probably reached the end of the admiral's patience and, in any case, a ship-rigged sloop was an attractive proposition. 'That would suit me main well, sir, I thank—'
'But then again . . .' Lockwood seemed to have warmed to him. His brow furrowed and he faced Kydd directly now. 'It's only proper to tell you,
'Sir, her name's not—
'As it happens, yes. Do you know her?'
'Sir—
CHAPTER 2
KYDD'S FACE WAS SORE from the spray whipping in with the dirty weather disputing every foot of
It would be some time before they could be sure of clearing the Cherbourg peninsula in this veering sou'-sou'- easterly, but it would be an easier beat as they bore up for Le Havre. Kydd couldn't help but reflect that it was passing strange to be navigating to raise the enemy coast directly where he had every intention of anchoring and making contact with the shore.
Earlier, he had eagerly claimed his ship and set about preparing her for sea. Then, in the midst of the work, urgent orders had been hurried over from the admiral's office: it was His Majesty's intention to respond to the repeated provocations of Napoleon Bonaparte by 'granting general reprisals against the ships, goods and subjects of the French Republic' within days. It would be the end of the fragile peace.
England planned to steal a march on Napoleon by declaring war first and any vessels, like
Still, miraculously, Kydd was at sea, in his own ship—and it was
Warmly, he recalled the welcome from the standing officers who had remained with the vessel all the time he had been far voyaging; Purchet the boatswain, Duckitt the gunner, Hurst the carpenter. And, in a time of the hottest press seen that age, the imperturbable quartermaster Poulden had appeared on the dockside, followed some hours later by the unmistakable bulk of Tobias Stirk, who was accompanied by another, younger seaman.
'Thought as how
Kydd had grunted and sized the man up; in his early twenties he had the build and direct gaze of a prime deep-water sailor. Of course he would take him—but why was the man wearing a grin from ear to ear that just wouldn't go away? Then it dawned on him. 'Ah! Do I see young Luke, b' chance?' The ship's boy of long ago in the Caribbean had grown and matured almost unrecognisably and was now Able Seaman Luke Calloway.
But as Stirk and Calloway were trusted men, Kydd had allowed them to go ashore and they were somewhere in the dockyard when he had sailed.
'Sir!'